Productivity is great. The more productive you are, the quicker you work. The quicker you work, the more you get done. The more you get done, the better you’ll feel about the time you’ve spent and the more important you’ll become to your team or company.

Unfortunately, humans can’t work like machines, and so you’ll need a bit of help from technology to work at your most effective pace. From experience, testing, and research, we here at Process Street have collected the 30 best productivity apps ever created for you to cut through your workload.

Now, I’m not saying that you should use all of them; that would defeat the point of streamlining your workflow and optimizing your day. Instead, these productivity apps are best used by picking one or two from each category.

Speaking of which, these tools cover:

Communication

Document Creation / Writing

Note Taking

Task & Project Management

Time Management

Spreadsheets

Storage

Social Media Management

Utilities

If you’re looking for an app to help your productivity in a specific area, then feel free to jump ahead to the right category. Otherwise, strap yourselves in, because you’re about to save yourself weeks of needless time wasting.

Communication

GoToMeeting

Available on: Windows, Mac, iOS, Android and Browser

GoToMeeting makes it incredibly easy to set up, then carry out a meeting on any of your devices. Whether you manually boot up the app, click the icon in your Windows tray or use their addon in programs such as Microsoft Office, GoToMeeting allows you to invite whoever you want into a meeting for either an audio or video call.

For maximum effectiveness, try using this to carry out the meetings you plan with a scheduling app like Doodle.

Inbox

Available on: Windows, iOS, Android and Browser

In the debate of Inbox vs Gmail, it’s a pretty tight finish. However, Inbox has taken over as the email app of choice for the Process Street team; the ability to batch archive with a single click, snooze emails until later, and even create one-click reminders sold us on the app.

It’s worth noting, though, that Inbox is better than Gmail only really if you want to archive (not delete) emails, and already have a Gmail address, since it’s built on top of Gmail. Still, if like us you despair at the state of your inbox, wishing there was a quicker way to handle the emails you don’t need to read without straight up deleting them, Inbox is a great way to solve your woes.

Slack

Available on: Windows, Mac, iOS, Android and BrowserSlack is team communication with charm. Not only is Slackbot a killer example of a user onboarding process, but it makes chatting with both individual team members and specific groups a cinch. In fact, Slack is the main port of communication between our teams at Process Street!

You can upload images, share files, integrate Slack with other apps (eg; send a Slack message when a Trello card in your board is edited), and even host calls with what is fast becoming a major player in the team chat scene. For example, not only do we separate out teams into various group chat channels (such as “content creation” and “content marketing”), but we reinforce our company culture by casually chatting and posting random gifs in the “general” channel.

TeamViewer

Available on: Windows, Mac, iOS, Android and Browser

With over one billion installations, TeamViewer is certainly a popular choice for online meeting, remote support and access. This nifty app allows you to not only communicate with your team effectively, but also take control of a team member’s desktop if they’re having issues.If your support team is struggling to convey fixes or topics over the phone, or even with screencasting, you can’t go wrong with TeamViewer.

If your support team is struggling to convey fixes or topics over the phone, or even with screencasting, you can’t go wrong with TeamViewer.

Bonus: SalesHandy

Available on: Browser

Managing your emails and tracking the ones you send can be a nightmare of complex products vying for your attention. Despite this, being able to track data such as when your emails are opened, how many times they’re opened, and whether any attachments are downloaded can be massively beneficial why trying to analyze how your email campaigns are performing.

This can help in a huge number of ways, from tracking how much of your list actually reads your emails to identifying customers who are likely to convert by checking how many times they opened your email without signing up.

Knowing this, if you want a tool which can notify you when certain emails are opened and give you information which you can use to optimize your campaigns, SalesHandy is well worth a try. It has a free trial (and limited free plan) plug into your browser to work fluently with services like Gmail, and has an easy-to-navigate dashboard, so what have you got to lose?

Document Creation / Writing

Google Docs

Available on: Windows, Mac, iOS, Android and Browser

Whilst Google Docs has been overshadowed a little by Quip, it’s far from beaten; although I’ve been testing Quip for a while now, I can’t quite bring myself to boot Docs for good. The grandaddy of collaborative text documents, Docs integrates with Google Drive for easy cloud storage, and comes with a host of options for sharing your documents with the rest of your team.

All edits are automatically saved and synced to your Google Drive, and all changes are recorded in an activity log, allowing you to keep track of exactly what was changed, when it was edited, and who changed it. This is why I (and several of our team) am reluctant to migrate fully to Quip; we all have local Google Drive backups of our work, and so using Docs to create new text documents just makes the most sense.

From allowing others to view, comment or even edits your own documents in real time, Docs is one hell of a killer writing app.

Quip

Available on: Windows, Mac, iOS, Android and Browser

Quip lets you create documents and collaborate on them with as little distraction as possible, from pretty much any device you could want to work on. Not only is it designed with collaboration and communication in mind, but the interface is fantastically easy to use, giving you a frictionless experience when all you need to do is sit down, open up a writing app and crack on.

For those members of our team who have been able to kick the Google Docs habit (namely Ben Brandall), Quip is serving as a more than able replacement. Collaboration on documents in Quip is, admittedly, even easier than in Docs, so bear that in mind when choosing your writing app.

Note Taking

Evernote

Available on: Windows, Mac, iOS, Android and Browser

Evernote makes taking screenshots, saving articles, making notes, and more incredibly easy. Not only can you save files, images, and notes from almost any device, but you can tag and arrange these items into specific folders, eliminating any clutter from your storage.

Coming as an app for Windows, Mac, iOS, Android, a website, and a browser addon, Evernote is brilliant for keeping a synced database of articles, notes, images, etc, across all of your devices. Give the free account a try; you can always upgrade if you fancy having a little more space to play with.

Pretty much our entire content team uses Evernote to snap screenshots and save articles for later, but we also use it to send notes to each other which are (via Zapier) converted into actionable Trello cards.Task & Project Management

Task & Project Management

Any.do

Available on: Mac, iOS, Android and Browser

Brilliant for anyone who’s often on-the-go, Any.do is a task management program which focuses on simplicity and syncing across multiple devices. Conversations, file uploads, and sub-tasks allow you to break down and work through tasks, whilst their Moments feature is ideal for quickly jotting out your morning plan for the day ahead.

The free plan is perfect for those just looking to keep themselves on track with a few simple tasks, but if you want to share more than one then you’ll need to upgrade to a premium account.

Asana

Available on: iOS, Android and Browser

Asana is a task and project management app which puts teamwork and organization at top priority. Coming with an internal chat system, calendar, task and project creator and manager, along with various views for your team means that everyone will know what they should be doing and when. You can even track the progress of your teammates’ tasks using their checkbox system.

Asana is free for teams of up to 15 members, and $8.33 per member per month beyond that. The price, however, also allows you to set private tasks and projects, have unlimited dashboards and guests, and set task dependencies.

OmniFocus

Available on: Mac and iOS

Although it’s only available on Mac and iOS (including the Apple Watch), OmniFocus is a powerful tool in your task management arsenal. Not only can you sync your tasks across all of your devices, but you can set reminders based on time or location (eg, remind you to buy milk when you walk past the store), sort through your tasks without directly opening the app, and even filter your tasks into particular perspectives for easy viewing.

Process Street

Available on: Browser

We can’t publish a post on the best productivity apps out there without including Process Street; the best app around for documenting your processes and tracking the progress of your team as they complete the tasks you give them. Not only can you improve the efficiency of your team by giving them a checklist to work through and tick off as they go, but their accuracy in their tasks will get a boost due to the instructions laid out in plain text.

From better onboarding to fine-tuning the workflow of your most effective team members, Process Street will help you to work as quickly and effectively as possible.

Todoist

Available on: Windows, Mac, iOS, Android and Browser

Todoist is a task management app which focuses on letting you set up, organize and complete your tasks quickly, all whilst spending as little time in the app itself as possible. It achieves this by naturally interpreting the language you use (for example, “Read a book chapter every day at 8pm”), making creating your tasks a cinch.

Plus, it’s our own team’s favorite personal to-do list app (by a small margin), due to how natural it feels to use. That is, if you’re willing to spend some money on the premium plan.

Trello

Available on: iOS, Android and Browser

Once you’ve used Trello, it’s hard to imagine tackling a large project without having a board set up for it. By creating boards to house your separate projects, you can make individual tasks into cards which can then be sorted into columns according to the action that needs to be taken or the progress of the task.

Not only that, but you can assign team members to specific cards, set due dates, add attachments, integrate it with hundreds of other apps via Zapier, add in-card checklists, and much, much more. For example, we have a “Blog Articles” board with columns such as “Ideas”, “Work In Progress”, “Waiting Review, and “Ready To Publish”. Then, whenever one of us gets a new idea, we create a card in the “Ideas” column and proceed to shift it over as the task progresses.

It’s both a worthy entry for being one of the best productivity apps, and our team’s pick for the best project management app on the market.

Wunderlist

Available on: Windows, Mac, iOS, Android and Browser

If you’re not quite ready to fork out for Todoist’s premium account, or you’re looking to integrate your to-do-list app with services, Wunderlist is a fantastic alternative. It has everything you could want to organize your life; folders, tasks, subtasks, reminders, attachments, collaboration, due dates and prioritization.

Admittedly, the UI is a little clunky to get to grips with, but the sheer list of features Wunderlist boasts is not to be underestimated.

Time Management

Doodle

Available on: Windows, Mac, iOS, Android and Browser

Doodle is all about making scheduling as easy as possible. The app will sync your calendar with anyone else you wish to arrange a meeting with, allowing you both to easily see the exact date and times you are both free. No switching between Doodle and your calendar, no mistakes or clashes with your schedule.A quick

A quick note though; the free version contains ads and will not allow you to set automatic reminders.

Google Calendar

Available on: Windows, Mac, iOS, Android and Browser

Google Calendar is a staple app of many across the world, but it’s nonetheless worth reinforcing as a fantastic piece of kit. The real power of GCalendar comes with its events; these allow you to segment your days into color-coded blocks of time, providing you with the framework of your day to come. Plus, if you don’t fancy using Doodle to arrange meetings, you can always share your calendar with a teammate and have them compare your free time to theirs to see when you’re both free to chat.

The app also allows you to specify the location of the event, add a Google Hangouts call, send others email invites to the event and generally organize your time effectively. For example, the content creation team here at Process Street have events in our calendars marked out for our twice-weekly calls to catch up and discuss how everything’s going; if the time changes or someone’s unavailable, we need only update the event.

Pomello

Available on: Windows and Mac

Whilst it’s not perfect, Pomello is a godsend for those of us who lose track of the time we spend on any given project. Following the Pomodoro Technique, Pomello tracks the time you spend on any task that you specify, telling you when to take a short or long break, and timing you for that too.

The best part, however, is that this timer integrates with your Trello board to automatically log the time you track in whichever Trello card you say that you’re working on. Our team’s pretty fond of the cute tomato symbols it leaves on your cards too!

Spreadsheets

Airtable

Airtable lets you create spreadsheets which go far beyond just storing data. Not only can you create and save custom filtered views for your records, but you can upload attachments, integrate with hundreds of apps through its API, link related data cells together, and even collaborate with your team on the same knowledge base.

For example, we use Airtable to track all of our content, linking keywords to search volume, titles to URLs, and much, much more. Any piece of content related to Process Street is recorded and documented, and with Airtable’s search and filter features, it’s easy to instantly bring up the information you need.

All that, plus the base app is free; currently, the only thing you can pay for is more records and available attachment storage in each of your “bases”, along with priority support. However, you can create unlimited bases for free, so unless you desperately need to link every piece of data, just create a fresh database for free when the old one is full.

Google Sheets

Available on: Windows, Mac, iOS, Android and Browser

Whilst Airtable can be a little intimidating to get to grips with, Google Sheets make spreadsheets easy (at the cost of being less useful to power users). Not only does the integration with Google Drive ensure that backups always exist, but they are incredibly easy to create and populate; if you’ve ever created a spreadsheet before, you’ll have no trouble navigating GSheets.

As previously mentioned, Sheets isn’t quite as customizable as Airtable. Aside from cell formulas, it’s difficult to link your entries together, and short of creating a new sheet, copying your data over and sorting it again, there’s no way to easily filter your results without editing their layout. Nonetheless, if you just need an app to quickly create basic spreadsheets, Google Sheets is the way to go.

Storage

1Password

Available on: Windows, Mac, iOS and Android

If you’ve ever found yourself getting lost amongst a growing pile of logins, all of which need to be unique, secure and on hand at all times, 1Password is the app for you. Not only can you store thousands of logins for easy retrieval, but their Chrome plugin lets you automatically fill in any saved login on your current page with a couple of clicks.

I, for example, started using 1Password shortly after joining the Process Street team back in November 2015. Now, rather than wasting time finding, guessing or resetting my passwords for various sites, all I need to remember is the master password to allow access to the 1Password vault.

Coming with a free 6 month trial (after which you’re charged $2.99 per month billed annually) and unlimited installations across devices, this app is a lifesaver.

Dropbox

Available on: Windows, Mac, iOS, Android and Browser

Dropbox is a handy cloud storage service which is ideal for users who want to keep things simple. Their file layout is similar to that of a desktop, making it easy to get to grips with, and you can gain a significant amount of free space (up to 16 Gb) if you successfully invite other users to the service.

Admittedly, when compared to its competitors, Dropbox can be found a little lacking for high-end users, but for anyone who wants to keep things simple and just back up a few files to the cloud for safekeeping, you can’t go wrong with Dropbox.

Google Drive

Available on: Windows, Mac, iOS, Android and Browser

Google Drive is the cloud storage platform for power users. Not only does it beat Dropbox for the standard amount of free space (15 Gb), but the effortless integration with Google Apps (which are pretty stellar in their own right) cements Drive as our go-to choice of cloud storage.

The local Google Drive folder on your computer can be used to upload files to the cloud storage easily and efficiently, whilst folder (and individual item) permissions are customizable. If you want to show a team member a specific file, but keep the others hidden, it’s no problem.

You can even use Google Drive to trigger various actions by using Zapier. Most recently, we’ve started using free screencasting apps and Google Drive together; when a screencast is saved into a specific Drive folder, Zapier automatically copies it into a Trello card and message to a specific teammate. This way no time is wasted, there is little confusion (you can visually demonstrate your point with a screencast) and you waste no time converting, exporting, then sending the final product.

Social Media Management

Buffer

Available on: iOS, Android and Browser

If you’ve ever considered an app for social media management, chances are that Buffer came up in your search. The premise is simple; you don’t always have time to post content to your social media accounts, especially if you have multiple, so why not schedule your posts instead?

Buffer allows you to easily do this for Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, Google+, Instagram and (if you’re a premium account) Pinterest. Needless to say, it’s insanely helpful to be able to spend a half hour queueing up 10 or so posts, then just leave it be until the next batch you want to release comes along. You can even queue up posts from your iOS or Android device whilst you’re on the go!

Tweetbot

Available on: Mac and iOS

If you’ve ever found yourself wishing for a cleaner Twitter experience, Tweetbot is the app for you. Serving as an alternate interface for Twitter, it hosts a customizable timeline, no ads, automatic syncing between the iOS and Mac apps, support for multiple Twitter accounts, along with the ability to save searches, view trends and much, much more.

In short, if your use Twitter for anything other than a quick notification checkup once a month, give Tweetbot a try.

Utilities

AirDroid

Available on: Windows, Mac and Android

If you have an Android device (especially one you use for work) then you’ll want to grab this. AirDroid allows you to access and interact with your Android device on your computer; you can answer messages, manage, copy, and send files, all from the comfort of your keyboard.

If you wanted to go further, their premium account lets you locate your phone from your computer, take photos of anyone trying to unlock your phone, dial remotely from the web and much more.

Freedom

Available on: Windows, Mac and iOS

Freedom lets you block distracting websites for a set amount of time, whether you’re on a PC or mobile device. For example, if you know that you’re being tempted by Twitter, or led astray by Facebook, you can nip that distraction in the bud and block it before you lose an hour to liking posts and cat videos.

Their trial allows you to have up to 7 blocking sessions, so take full advantage of that time to see just how much your productivity goes up when you can’t access those distracting websites at all.

IFTTT

Available on: iOS, Android and Browser

IFTTT (If This Then That) allows you to automate simple processes easily. It operates on a simple model; if a specific event happens (eg, you receive an email), an action is performed (eg, all attachments are saved into Google Drive).

Whilst it isn’t quite as powerful as Zapier, the simplicity of IFTTT, along with the ready-to-use automations submitted by other users, make it perfect for simple processes and personal use. For example, whilst our team loves Zapier, using IFTTT’s mobile apps make it incredibly easy to create a note in Evernote from your mobile device, or save an image of a receipt.

Pocket

Available on: iOS, Android and Browser

Pocket is pretty much bookmarking on steroids. Using your browser, email, or any of over 500 applications (including Twitter and Flipboard), you can save content to read or view later if you’re pushed for time.

Be it an article, video, or something else, all of this content can also be synced to your iOS or Android devices to view on the go. A perfect addition for anyone drowning in bookmarks or content that they can never quite get around to taking a look at.

Skitch

Available on: Mac and iOS

Skitch is an app from the team over at Evernote which lets you quickly capture, annotate, then save (or send) images. Whilst the support for the Windows and Android versions are certainly missed, Skitch continues to be a great way for Mac and iOS users to easily snap a screenshot or photo, add text, arrows, basic shapes or highlight in various colors, then ship it off to where it needs to go.

Zapier

Available on: Browser

Oh, Zapier. If I talked about you any more, people will start to think I’ve got a brand deal. Still, Zapier stands as an indispensable tool to anyone who wants to boost their productivity and automate the boring tasks that they shouldn’t have to do.

By integrating with over 1,000 other apps, you can tell Zapier to automatically detect “Trigger” events and perform an “Action”. Think of it as a business-focused version of IFTTT, but a lot more powerful.

Do You Agree With Our Best Productivity Apps?

So there you have it; the 30 best productivity apps ever created. Once again, don’t go away and try to use all of these at once – you’ll probably so lost in creating your to-do list every day that you’ll never get started on your real work. Instead, think about what you need to streamline and take some inspiration from a category or two above.

Got any suggestions for killer productivity tools that aren’t on this list? Leave a comment below with your suggestion and it may even make it into a future post, or an update to this list.

Definitely check out TextExpander. I use it especially for email addresses. It saves a lot of time when you can type something simple like @t rather than a whole email address like [email protected] every time. It can be used for many other scenarios as well.

Fantastic list! Every time you have anything productivity focused that you publish, I’m all over it immediately because I love finding new tools in this area.

I see a lot of my current favorites and a couple new ones to play with here – very curious about Skitch and Airtable, specifically.

One to add to the Time Management section – a personal fave of mine is called Plan (http://getplan.co). It’s a useful tool that integrates with Google Calendar. You can add all your to-dos, sort them into color-coded categories and then tetris them into your week to make sure everything you want to get done can actually be accomplished in the time that you have. It’s been a life saver in terms of testing if my “what I want to accomplish” in a week is realistic or not.

Why thank you! Productivity is a bit of a sticking point for me too; if I start to lag behind and know that I can do better, I get really annoyed with myself. 😉

Skitch is indeed great is you’re looking for a quick way to annotate images. It’s no Photoshop, but it’s so much easier to use.

I wouldn’t be surprised if Airtable has saved each of us at least a week’s worth of work in the short time we’ve been using it. The ability to create smart, interlinked spreadsheets will various kinds of cells is incredible; makes tracking anything and everything a cinch.

I’ll certainly take a look into Plan – sounds interesting, and you sold me at “Tetris”. 😉

Let me know how you get on with those tools; I’d love to hear if they help you, or even change the way you work!

I like the tools, and think some of them are pretty good, but I feel like this is largely is for the minority of businesses who don’t use MS Office, or more specifically Office 365. I would like to see something similar to this that lists productivity apps that integrate into O365. That would be an interesting list IMO.

Thanks for the suggestion! Our team actually already uses Workflowy, and it is indeed incredibly useful (I take notes in our weekly meetings with it, arranging them according to the date).

Whilst it didn’t quite make the cut for this list (we were aiming to cover the basic essentials of various situations without making it into a short novel 😉 ), rest assured that if this had been a “top 50”, Workflowy would be right up there. 🙂

It’s still a work in progress, but I’m consistently using it for keeping track of boolean searches for recruiting projects; email templates I’m sending in different situations; and a todo list in the style of “Master Your Workday Now!” by Michael Linenberger. Also, I take notes during conversations with clients and candidates and save job and company details for phone conversations with candidates. I use tags like #waiting; #talked, #leftOff

Nice collection and description of productivity apps. As we are using google for work I think google keep is an wonderful app. It is not mentioned in anywhere but works better than wunderlist. You can share your list with your colleagues. Also I take lot of pictures of discussion, these can be tagged and shared. Can be saved as google doc document. It has inbuilt reminders. So ib think you should review it once.

The communication tools like email allow the senders to interrupt our flow. Our app of choice should help us to communicate but also let us to do our work without interruption.

Formal is a messaging app that delivers messages only three times a day in batches.
Giving us interruption free time to get our work done.

Unlike email Formal holds the messages on the sender’s queue until receive time reaches. So it not only free the receiver from interruption (even they kept open the app to search some early messages) it also clarifies the reply expectation time of the sender.

Nice overview! Very helpful summary!
I would like to add Beamium to your list. Like dropbox it is about sharing documents online, but there’s no registration required, which is actually pretty cool as I don’t want to share my data.

Thanks for the suggestions! Alfred is indeed insanely useful, although it didn’t quite make the top 30 list because of our attempts to cover as many platforms as possible. Rest assured that it would be up there on the top 50 list though. 🙂

Also, if Alfred is the One App, does that make the Pepperrells some sort of Sauron duo?

As for BetterTouchTool, I believe that’s the first time I’ve heard of it, but it seems very useful. So, on top of creating shortcuts with the gestures alone, you could link it with something like Alfred to apply those gestures to more situations?

Anything that helps with passwords is a pleasure to have in the arsenal! I’ll have to check out Roboform; the single payment plan with all devices included is something that might actually tear me away from 1Password.

Nothing wrong with a bit of bias, and in this kind of post any suggestion is a good one! I’ll be sure to chek it out and get some of our team in on the tester. 😉

Love so many of these apps! One category thats missing is meeting management. Our app http://www.meeteor.com helps you plan a thoughtful agenda, take clear notes and manage meeting outcomes for effective followthrough. If you want to talk productivity, it starts by wasting less time in unproductive meetings! Check it out and we’d love your feedback.

Whilst we couldn’t quite fit it in with the top 30 apps, it’s safe to say that it would’ve happily made the cut for a top 50. Who knows? We may even do a “30 more” post in the future where Kanban will get the spotlight. 😉

Great list. Love Trello and Zapier! Would also recommend to add Freeter https://freeter.io – I use it to group project files, Trello boards, notes, etc. by project workflows and jump between them in a second.

Thanks, that’s a great list of productivity tools!
Already using most of them, but also found some new ones (like Freedom and Process Street) I’ll try out.
Personally, I also very regularly use Podio for project management and Tagpacker for bookmarking and sharing filterable link lists.

Great list! I’m using so many of these tools already and glad to add a few more to the “to research” file (aka my Tools project in Asana).

I’ve just started using Refind and am finding it’s a great way to keep track of all these great articles I find. Often I tweet something when I want to reference it again and the beauty of refind is that it captures all of my tweets too so now I don’t have to scroll through my feed to find them again, I can just tag them in Refind for easy access!

Thank you so much! I hear you – building that library of reference material is so vital but it can be a nightmare to organize it properly. I’m still using Pocket at the minute, but I’ll have to give Refind a try. 🙂

Thanks John. I believe Freshbooks has a pretty good feature for tracking hours – if memory serves correctly you can manually log your hours after the fact or use an in-built timer (which can be voided/reset) to log the time for you.

Hey Ben – awesome list. I’m partial to Workflowy for a todo list – worth a look if you haven’t heard of it.

I also wanted to share a very early stage product I’m working on, http://www.focusmate.com. We provide live, peer accountability over 1-hour video sessions to help eliminate procrastination. Sort of like study hall for adults.

If you do check it out I’d love to know your feedback. Fair warning: it’s rudimentary/ugly but we’re working on it 🙂

Aye, Workflowy is a brilliant app – most of our team uses it now, although it didn’t quite make the top 30. After all of the suggestions in the comments though we may well end up expanding this list at some point, and if we do it’ll be a surefire entry.

Online shared offices – sounds like a brilliant idea! I’ve shared it with my team, and although most of us already use shared offices, if we try it out then I’ll certainly hit you up with some feedback.

(Also, don’t worry about it being ugly – the idea and use of it is a way higher priority than a fancy UI in my books 😉 )

Did you know with Google Drive that if you ever lose your files and folders, accidently delete or whatever, you can do a restore BUT it will ONLY restore all the files, as in restore all files but not in their folders, absolute joke

Hi Ben.
Nice article. It has been much easier since a started using some online pm tools. I personally use Kanbanize for project management/collaboration and Flow-e for emails. I tried Slack as well, but I think there are better solutions. It depends on personal preferences as always 🙂
Cheers.

Thanks for the compliment! I try my best to make them as helpful as possible. 🙂

I’ve heard of both tools but not yet tried them myself. Productivity is an ongoing battle, so I’ll have to give them a try and maybe include them in this list too. Thanks for recommending them!

Indeed, personal preference plays a huge part, and so does the amount of time you’ve been using the tool for. For example, I’ve found that my productivity seems to plateau after a while and I get another boost if I swap up my routine. For example, I might listen to game soundtracks one day, instrumental music the next, and then switch to classical radio for another.

A short note on wunderlist – it’s being shut down (at some point). I was a loyal user of wunderlist, but knowing it will be gone one day, I am now trying to familiarize myself with their (microsoft that is) new app “to do”. It’s decent but IMHO noting close wunderlist.

Thanks for the reminder on that! Wunderlist (as of writing) are still up and running, and have recently said that they’ll be going for at least another few months. Work on To Do is apparently very slow.

Having said that, Wunderlist will indeed not be getting any new features or updates (other than, I suspect, bug fixes) so you’re probably doing the right thing with testing To Do and trying to get to grips with it.

ClickUp has been on our radar for a while (we’ve actually been in talks with them about guest posting opportunities – they’re a really nice team 🙂 ) so I’ll definitely be checking them out at some point.

I’ll be sure to try Toby – it’s a really novel idea and our team (as with many others) suffer from the problem of losing track of our tabs. It’s especially a pain when researching new topics, as we end up with a massive number of research tabs and only one or two that we need open to write in.